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Notes on Iran,
Afghanistan, etc.
by Murray N.
Rothbard*
This article was
originally published in the January-February 1980 issue of The
Libertarian Forum.
There are many odd,
fascinating, and amusing aspects of the Iranian, etc. crisis which
have not even been pointed out, much less discussed by the media -
despite the grave and newsworthy nature of the crises. The following
are some of them - in no particular order.
1. Good and Bad
Muslims. We have heard a lot, much sound and fury signifying
little, on Islam and its troubles. But if the Muslim militants are
terrible "fanatics" in Iran, how come that they are heroic freedom
fighters in Afghanistan, not very far away? Is it because the latter
are "our" fanatics, while the Iranians are ... their own?
2. Not Only Commies
are Bad Guys. We were promised, by conservatives and liberals
alike, that they too are opposed to American imperialism and
expansionism (that is, the sophisticates who admit these bad things
exist) but that the ideal of non-interventionism has to be shelved
for the duration of the "international Communist conspiracy", the
overwhelming diabolism of which requires this ideal to be
overridden. But no one except a few right-wing crazies has
maintained that the Ayatollah and his forces are Commies or tools of
the Kremlin. So why the high tide of hysteria for intervention and
war against Iran? Could it be old-fashioned national chauvinism and
American imperial pique?
3.Not Every,
American Gets Picked Up In Iran. In the hysteria over the
hostages, it has been forgotten that not every American in Iran has
been detained by the militants. Many Americans, including TV
personnel, have been roaming around Iran, filming demonstrations,
and remaining unharmed. Why have the militants focused on U.S.
embassy personnel? Is it because the latter are tainted with support
for two decades of American intervention on behalf of the hated
Shah? The worst that happened to Marvin Kalb, when he leaked the
Ghotbzadeh attack on the Ayatollah, was that his broadcast
facilities got cut off.
4. Not Every
Hostage Generates Hysteria in the U.S. The taking of hostages is
a rotten and deplorable act. But how come indignation over
hostage-taking is so selective? Nobody raised a peep when left-wing
militants held an American woman hostage for two weeks in El
Salvador recently. And no one has denounced the Azerbaijaini
militants for holding nine emissaries of Khomeini hostage in Tabriz.
5. Not All Private
Diplomacy is Bad. Ultraconservative Rep. George Hansen (R. Id.)
in a courageous and rather lovable attempt at doing something to
free or at least to observe the hostages, flew to Teheran on his own
and was the first American to get in to see the hostages; it was
Hansen, furthermore, who raised what may well turn out to be the
solution to the mess: for the U.S. to investigate its own aid to the
Shah as well as the Shah's tyrannical regime. For his pains, Hansen
was denounced by nearly everyone, left, right, and center, for
having the gall to engage in "private diplomacy". And yet when the
Rev. William Sloane Coffin and two other clergymen visited the
hostages in Teheran, everyone applauded and no one denounced them.
Is there a double standard at work?
6. Who Are The
Hostages? Confusion has arisen over how many American hostages
there are in Teheran. Is it 50? Or less? Yet how can the State
Department expect to clear up the confusion unless it names names,
and tells us who the hostages are supposed to be. Yet it refuses to
do so, darkly hinting that there are good and sufficient reasons.
But the State Department agitates for the Iranians to
disclose their names. Huh?
7. Who in Hell are
the "Students"? We've been hearing about the now-famous
"students" who have been holding the hostages in the American
embassy. Yet who in hell are they? What are their names? We
have found out the names of Khomeini's cabinet, and of the ruling
Revolutionary Council; yet the pestiferous students go on in secret.
Why does no one even express befuddlement that there are no names?
And, furthermore, when and what do they "study"? And where? When do
they go to class, take exams, get grades?
8. Who are the
Fanatics? When the hostage crisis began, there rose to seemingly
great power as No. 2 man in Iran, and its Foreign Minister, the
"economist" Abolhassan Bani-Sadr, an engaging young lad who looked
like a cross between Charlie Chaplin and the young Trotsky. We were
assured, across a spectrum ranging from State Department files to
the left-wing Italian interviewer Oriana Fallaci, that Bani-Sadr was
a dangerous "fanatic" and extremist, that he was a rabid Pol Potnik
who wanted to drive everyone out of Teheran and other cities and
into small handicraft villages in the countryside. Very quickly,
however, it turned out that Bani-Sadr was a "moderate", that he
wanted to make a face-saving deal to release the hostages,and in a
couple of weeks he was out, consigned to media oblivion, a victim of
his own sober moderation. He was replaced as Foreign Minister by
Propaganda Minister Sadegh Ghotbzadeh, who we were assured in turn
was really a fanatic and extremist, having driven out the
"moderate" Bani-Sadr. But at present writing it looks as if
Ghotbzadch is not much more for this world – at least as a statesman
– since he too is a "moderate" who wants to release the hostages.
After the driving off of Kurt Waldheim from Teheran (as an old
anti-UN person I must admit the act had a certain amount of charm),
the startled Ghotbzadeh confided to Marvin Kalb that he thought that
the Ayatollah was out of touch with reality and unfit to rule. Wow!
So who in blazes are
the extremists? For a while, extremist-watchers were pinning their
hopes on the sinister-looking Ayatollah Sadegh Khalkhali, head of
the Revolutionary Tribunal and known lovingly in Iran as the
"hanging judge", who had executed hundreds of the Shah's aides and
was in charge of the world-wide execution teams sent abroad to wreak
justice upon the ex-ruler. And yet Khalkhali too proved
disappointing; for at one point he blurted out that the American
hostages were "guests" of Iran and should be treated as such and
sent home.
So where are the
extremists and who are they, apart from the persistently anonymous
"students"?
9. Are The Commies
the Fanatics? Nope, much as this will disappoint the
conservatives who see Reds under every bed. The Tudeh Party, the
Communist party in Iran, while part of the Khomeini coalition, is,
as are CP's everywhere, sober, cautious, and rather bourgeois. They
probably consider the "students" bonkers, if they indeed know who
they are.
10. Must We Die For
Kabul? And now there is trumped-up Afghanistan crisis. This is
probably even more bizarre than the Iranian caper. Can we tolerate
Soviet expansion into Afghanistan? Well, in the first place, they
already did it. To be precise, in April 1978, a pro-Soviet coup
installed a pro-Communist regime in Kabul. And nobody made a
fuss. And why, indeed, should they? Afghanistan, after all, is
right on the Soviet border. Soviet intervention into Afghanistan,
deplorable as it is, is old hat - part of its long-standing concern,
stretching back to Czarist days, over"spheres of influence" on its
borders. No domino has toppled since April, 1978. U.S. intervention
into Vietnam, or Afghanistan or Pakistan, is not on our
borders, but half the globe away. Secondly, as we have said, there
has been a pro-Soviet regime in Kabul since the spring of 1978; the
current third dictator has won out over two other Reds. Hafizullah
Amin, shot by the Soviets and/or the new Kabral regime, was too
Commie for the Russians, that is, he precipitated the Muslim
guerrilla revolt by radical land nationalization, angering the
peasants and tribesmen. The shrewder and more cautious Russians
wanted the Afghan Commies to move more slowly.
So must Americans
sweat, be expropriated, fight and maybe die to avenge the more
Commie dictator? I hope that the Muslim guerrillas will
eventually win, and I think they will – I believe that Afghanistan
will wind up as Soviet Russia's Vietnam. But let, for heaven's sake,
the U.S. stay the hell out; let the Afghans struggle over their own
fate. In addition to the high immorality of dragging Americans to
pay, die, and kill for Kabul it will strategically ruin the black
eye that Russia will receive throughout the world for its own
intervention, and will mitigate the anti-imperialist natured of the
eventual Afghan guerrilla victory.
In the late 1930's the
French non-interventionists raised the slogan: Pourquoi mourir
pour Danzig? (Why die for Danzig?) Let us raise the comparable
question: why die for Kabul? Even strategically and geo-politically,
Afghanistan has no resoures, no oil, no nuttin'.
11. The Sydney
Smith Quote. Upon the Afghan crisis, it is time again to
resurrect the wise and marvelous quote from Canon Sydney Smith, the
great classical liberal and anti-interventionist in early nineteenth
century England. When Lord Grey, the Prime Minister, was moving
toward a foreign war, Sydney Smith wrote the following letter to
Lady Grey, in 1832: "For God's sake, do not drag me into another
war! I am worn down, and worn out, with crusading and defending
Europe, and protecting mankind; I must think a little of
myself. I am sorry for the Spaniards - I am sorry for the Greeks - I
deplore the fate of the Jews; the people of the Sandwich Islands are
groaning under the most detestable tyranny; Baghdad is oppressed, I
do not like the present state of the Delta; Tibet is not
comfortable. Am I to fight for all these people? The world is
bursting with sin and sorrow. Am I to be champion of the Decalogue,
and to be eternally raising fleets and armies to make all men good
and happy? We have just done saving Europe, and I am afraid the
consequence will be, that we shall cut each other's throats. No war,
dear Lady Grey! - No eloquence; but apathy, selfishness, common
sense, arithmetic! I beseech you, secure Lord Grey's swords and
pistols, as the housekeeper did Don Quixote's armour. If there is
another war, life will not be worth having.
'May the vengeance of
Heaven' overtake the Legitimates of Verona! but, in the present
state of rent and taxes, they must be left to the vengeance
of Heaven. I allow fighting in such a cause to be a luxury, but the
business of a prudent, sensible man is to guard against luxury.
"There is no such
thing as a just war, or at least, as a wise war."
12. No, No,
Embargoes. The Carter schemes for various boycotts and embargoes
on Iran, and now the Soviet Union, are immoral, dangerous, and
counterproductive. They are immoral because they coercively prohibit
trade whether it be sales of grain or purchases of oil, which are
the proper province of each person's control over his own money and
property, and not of the U.S. government. They also prohibit
exchanges which are beneficial to us as well as the Bad Guys, as
trade always is. To the extent individual Americans go along with
the boycott, we are cutting off our noses to spite our face; to the
extent they don't, we are criminally aggressing against their rights
of property. Embargoes are counterproductive because they don't
work; one bushel of grain looks like any other bushel; one barrel of
crude oil looks like any other (only God can distinguish "Communist"
or " faniatical Muslim" barrels from all others). Therefore, third
parties in other nations, heroically seeing opportunities for
profit, will inevitably arise to break the boycott and/or embargo:
To sell grain to Russia or oil to the U.S. through middlemen and
third parties. That is why the embargo against Rhodesia never
worked. Finally, embargoes are dangerous because they step up
tension in the direction of a devastating world war.
13. Save the
Olympics! And now, Carter, in a fit of punishing the Russians
over our historic ties with Afghanistan (Hub? Wha?) wants to destroy
the Olympics, to boycott it because it is taking place in Moscow.
Goddamn it, is there no area of life that can escape the
blight of politicization? Isn't it enough that we are taxed,
conscripted, propagandized, killed in war? Can't we at least enjoy
our sports in peace? Olympic committees are private, and they are
financed, mainly (though unfortunately not exclusively) privately in
the U.S. and the West. Furthermore, the Olympic ideal has always
been to keep sports out of politics: to have an international comity
of sports and athletes apart from government. It is vital that
governments keep their mitts out of the Olympics. It is already
unfortunate that South African athletes have been discriminated
against in past Olympics because of the policies of their
government. Let us not compound this with Carter's petulant and
irrelevant assault upon sports fans throughout the globe. For shame!
14. Who Seized the
Grand Mosque? The Khartoum Connection. To get back to the
bizarraries of the Middle East. Who seized the Grand Mosque in
Mecca? It took a long time to clear out the "fanatics" who took over
this most sacred shrine in all of Islam. Were they Shiite
Khomeini-ites as the U.S. believed? Commies, Russian agents, as the
American right suspected? Agents of the CIA, as Khomeini charged? No
one fully knows, but best reports indicate none of the above.
Apparently, this was a small "fanatical" Sunni sect, in which a
young lad proclaimed himself the Mahdi, the Expected One, the
Messiah.
As far as I can piece
it out, the Sunni Mahdi can pop up anywhere. The Shiite Mahdi, if
such this young lad was, is the Twelfth, or Hidden Imam. The Shiites
believe that there were Eleven Imams, each descended in turn from
the Prophet Mohammed, his son-in-law Ali, and the latter's son, the
martyr Hussein. After eleven of these descendants, the Twelfth Imam,
I believe in the late 11th century, retired to some cave, where he
remains hidden - and of, course, alive - until he returns to the
panting world as the Mahdi. The Sunnis, on the other hand, don't
hold with this line of descent, and pick Imams spontaneously from
mass - or, in a sense, free market, or free society - approval.
Except, of course, for the Ottoman Caliphs, but they have
been gone for a century or so.
How can the faithful
tell when the Mahdi arrives? It is a rum question, indeed, otherwise
any schmuck can pop up and call himself the Mahdi. The Shiite
Hidden Imam I suppose has certain signs, perhaps cave dirt. But
those of who saw that grand old turkey of a movie, Khartoum,
know the score. And I'll say this, we know more about the Mahdi
than do faithful readers of the New York Times. Khartoum,
with Charlton Heston playing the crazed British nationalist
General Gordon, portrays the last great Sunni Mahdi, who popped up
in the Sudan in the early 1880's and killed General Gordon at
Khartoum. In the pictures, one great scene, Laurence Olivier, in
blackface, rolling his eyes and hamming it up outrageously as the
Mahdi, tells Gordon of his significance and his plans for the
future: "I am de Mahdi, de Expected One," he says. "I have de signs:
I have de gap in de tooth, I have de mole", and then another sign
which I forget. And then: "I shall enter de mosque at Khartoum, then
I shall enter de mosque at Cairo..." "Entering the mosque" was
patently a Mahdian euphemism. It didn't mean simply walking into the
mosque as a penitent; it meant entering with thousands of his
troops, slaughtering all in his path. He proceeded to outline his
path of conquest, up to and including "entering de mosque" at
Constantinople. I am surprised the movie didn't attribute to him
plans for world conquest, and that we'd better fight him in Khartoum
or else fight him in the streets of New York . At any rate obviously
he didn't make it; in fact, he never got beyond Khartoum.
And just as obviously
the current would-be Mahdi didn't get very far either. But, Mahdi-
watchers can always hope.
15. Gut Fears of
Islam; the 1930's Movie Connection. In all the hysteria about
Muslim Fanaticism there is a touch of old movie. Perhaps there has
been an almost neo-Jungian penetration of deep anti-Muslim symbols
and fears into the American psyche. Maybe from seeing too many Gary
Cooper-French Foreign Legion - Evil and Crazed Arab pictures. Surely
you know what I mean. A dozen heroic French Foreign Legionnaires,
led by Gary Cooper and ably seconded by Victor McLaglen, are riding
across the trackless wastes of the Sahara Desert. There they are
surrounded, at the ruins of some old fort, by hundreds of fanatical,
hopped up, kamikaze-type Arabs, who are willing to die for their
crazed beliefs; one by one the heroic white men get picked off,
until zero or one or two are rescued (depending on whether it is an
Optimistic or Pessimistic picture). Usually the Arab charges are led
by whirling dervishes and other such sinister madmen.
Come on now, fellow
Americans! This is not 1933, and you are not Gary
Cooper, and we are not hot and thirsty on the Sahara, surrounded by
hundreds of fanatical Arabs/Muslims. We're home and safe, in our
comfy armchairs, drinking beer watching the Super Bowl. And Jung is
dead.
16. The Persian
Imperium. We have seen a lot about unrest in Iran among the
Baluchis, Kurds, Azerbaijanis, et al. But the significance of
this unrest has not really penetrated to the media and the American
public. It seems pretty clear that Iran is a swollen empire, with
the ethnic Persians, in the central core of the country,
constituting about half the Iranian population, holding sway over a
whole bunch of nationalities on the periphery: The Turkomans in the
northeast, the Baluchis in the southeast, Arabs in the southwest,
Fars ditto, Kurds in the northwest, and Azerbaijanis in the far
northwest. All of these are nations in their own right, and have
been oppressed for decades by Persian central control, first under
the Shah, and now under Khomeini. One happy result of the Iranian
revolution may be to dismember the swollen Persian empire.
How did the empire get
this way? How did Persian boundaries extend to include all these
minority nationalities? When? Why doesn't the New York Times
tell us?
17. You Can't Know
the Ayatollahs Without a Scorecard. The Iranian crisis has
brought to the fore a whole unfamiliar hierarchy of Shiites in Iran,
melded in as yet unclear ways into a theocracy over the country.
From what we can piece together, here is a tentative reader's guide
to all the hierarchs. In the first place, as we mentioned earlier,
no one picks or appoints Ayatollahs or any other hierarch. They are
picked from below, by public approval of their learning, wisdom,
whatever – in a free market manner. Ayatollahs are selected by the
faithful in much the same way as judges would be picked in an
anarcho-capitalist society, or were picked under older tribal or
common law: those who were considered the ablest, wisest, most
learned, etc.
On the lowest level,
there is the mullah, the local preacher. There are thousands
of mullahs throughout Iran, and these indeed constituted the main
organization for the revolution. Ulemas are teaching mullahs,
comparable to professors. Above the mullahs are the ayatollahs,
of whom there are many dozens throughout Iran. And above them,
selected by the same process of veneration by the faithful, are the
Grand Ayatollahs, of which there are six in Iran. Khomeini is
one of the Grand Ayatollahs. Of the six, two are inactive somewhere
in the boonies, and one of the four actives is quite ill. Khomeini
has, of course, acquired supreme political leadership, first of the
revolution and now of Iran, and hence is considered the Imam.
(That is why some? all? of the militant "students" call
themselves Followers of the Imam's Line.) Khomeini is considered, or
at least used to be considered , only the second ranking Grand
Ayatollah in terms of wisdom and holiness. First ranking was always
the Grand Ayatollah Kazem Shariat- Madari (of whom more below).
Shariat-Madari was originally the leader of the anti-Shah
revolution, but he proved too moderate, staying at home instead of
leaving into exile, and willing to give the neo-Shah puppet premier
Shahpur Bakhtiar a chance. Hence, allowing Khomeini to seize
leadership. Shariat-Madari is now heading an Azerbajaini rebellion
against Khomeini because he objects to Khomeini's new constitution
for Iran proclaiming himself Fagbi for life. Faghi is
absolute ruler, and I guess could be considered an Imam with
political muscle. All clear now?
18. Old Curmudgeons
in Iran. For us Old Curmudgeons, there is a particularly lovable
aspect to the current Iranian regime. They are, first of all, as Old
Curmudgeonly as they come. In fact, if TIME can name the Ayatollah
Khomeini Man of the Year, then surely he is even more the Old
Curmudgeon of the Decade. (I hasten to add, to cover my flanks in
the movement, that the Ayatollah is most emphatically not a
Libertarian. But he is definitely and Old curmudgeon
extraordinaire. )
But there is a more
detailed point to make. For another charming aspect of the Iranian
regime is the veneration for age. For one of the reasons that
the Grand Ayatollah Shariat-Madari has broken angrily with Khomeini
is - in addition to the totalitarian and centralizing nature of the
regime - because Shariat-Madari, formerly the mentor of Khomeini,
considers Khomeini a young pup of 79. Shariat-Madari, you see, is
all of 81. As us Old Curmudgeons get inexorably older, facing an
American culture that is slap-happy over youth, the attractions of a
reverence for elder Ayatollahs grow greater.
*Writing as "The Old
Curmudgeon."
Copyright © 2001 Ludwig von Mises
Institute
Murray Rothbard
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